October 2012

blurbing every story in the new New York Tyrant


I wrote a blurb for every story in the new issue of New York Tyrant.

Luke Goebel guest-edited this issue and dedicated it to his brother, who passed away last year. The quality of the writing in here is killer. Sometimes when a journal has so many big names it’s all b-sides. But everybody brought it. Also, most of these pieces contend in some way with the dual burdens of the physical body and family, so the issue as a whole feels like a unified fantasy of escape from a packed boiler room.

Also there is a release party this Friday at KGB Bar in NYC. There will be an open bar from 8-10 PM and no readings.

OK…the blurbs:

“Amber, Freckled” by Cooper Renner
Renner’s terse prose dissolve the notion of the fixed self in a surreal, genderless kitchen. Kill your family.

“Clyde Roy” by Brandon Hobson
Whose body is this? That is the question Clyde Roy and so many of us face. Readers who want out of themselves will identify with this story. Kill your family.

untitled drawing by Atticus Lish
On looseleaf paper, Lish portrays a baby who gives his mother more sexual pleasure than her husband. Kill your husband.

READ MORE >

I Like __ A Lot / 6 Comments
October 15th, 2012 / 5:45 pm

Live-Tweet The Shining, Pants the Moon

nullDeep in the throat of the internet, a movement is rising. This movement has a cruel ass need to lay down a laugh track over bloody human tragedy. They’ve already taken their fight to space. Now, on October 28th, they prepare to plague down on Sidewinder, CO via Twitter. Read their intentions!

A few months ago hundreds of funny, smart tweeters got together all over the USA to LIVE TWEET 2001: A Space Odyssey. It was LIFE AFFIRMING and fun and hilarious and it’s time to do it again!

On Sunday, October 28th, at 7pm MST join Elisa Gabbert (@egabbert) and Sommer Browning (@vagtalk) in Live Tweeting THE SHINING!!

We’ll start the film precisely at 7pm Mountain time (that’s 9pm for you Easterners, 6pm for West Coast & 8pm for Middlekins…I don’t know why I said Middlekins or why I’m teaching you about how time zones work.)

This is going to be the most fun you’ve had since you stopped going to church.

Hashtag: #redrum

Laugh at other peoples pain and join the movement of Sommer Browning and Elisa Gabbert here. And don’t forget to look for the bullshit. The moon is a liar.

Random / 1 Comment
October 15th, 2012 / 4:40 pm

Expanding Emily Dickinson’s Wardrobe

This past weekend I sort of wandered around Brooklyn. As I jaunted past a two-story Burger King, humming my favorite Lesley Gore tune of the moment, I ran smack dab into the ghost of Emily Dickinson.

“Hi,” I said to Emily’s ghost, calmly. I had no reason to be flummoxed since this sort of thing occurs frequently.

“Never mind the chitchat,” replied Emily (rudely, if you ask me). “Let’s get down to brass tacks. A cute and charming 21st-century poet has translated every single one of my verse compositions, attracting new fans and admirers. I certainly don’t want these fans and admirers to only see me in my one outfit – my white cotton dress. I want the world to think that I am a fashion-conscious girl who possess a plethora of clothes. Can you assist me in expanding my wardrobe?”

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Author Spotlight & I Like __ A Lot & Mean / 4 Comments
October 15th, 2012 / 2:12 pm

Reviews

No Trade Secrets: Andrew Choate’s New Nonchalance

Stingray Clapping
by Andrew Choate
Insert Blanc Press, 2012
56 pages / $12 (Limited Editions $18 – $36)  Buy from Insert Blanc Press

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

necktie popcorn

Andrew Choate’s new book Stingray Clapping, in a small and beautiful volume from Insert Blanc Press, is full of enigmatic, minimal pieces like the above. “Necktie popcorn” is actually a pretty typical example of the stuff in this book: it’s sharp, fascinating, and oddly pleasurable. In a sense, many of these pieces stay true to the old (post)modernist ethos of foregrounding the words themselves; they often appear divorced of any real-world referential quality. Then again, envisioning actual necktie popcorn is also a weirdly enjoyable thought. In fact, nailing down Choate’s poetics with this book is almost impossible given the multitude of readings many of these “poems” allow or refute.

horse by watching

What does someone do with a piece like “horse by watching?” Many works here deny any kind of limited reading because they just don’t make any “sense.” “Horse by watching” could be read as a kind of minimalist, concrete poem; it may even be a sort of pun on something like “hoarse from talking”—or it’s just some random shit thrown together. Much of Stingray Clapping echoes and updates Robert Grenier’s almost-forgotten Sentences, another enigmatic and seemingly nonchalant work of pure pleasure-granting experimental poetry. One of the more intriguing elements of both books is that they don’t make excuses. Choate isn’t rationalizing his “project” here; instead he seems to be celebrating a kind of lazy, half-assed aloofness throughout the work.

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October 15th, 2012 / 12:00 pm

Now Available: [out of nothing] #0: theoretical perspectives on the substance preceding [nothing]

Super excited about the release of [out of nothing] #0 guys. Yes, disclaimer: it’s a project that I co-edit, but this is our first print issue and it’s pretty kickass. It’s got some awesome work by some awesome writers including Vanessa Place, Bhanu Kapil, Maxi Kim, & Nick Montfort. Plus, it’s got guest appearances from Walter Benjamin, Jean Baudrillard, Jacques Derrida & Søren Kierkegaard.

The official release is November 1st, but there’s a sweet pre-sale deal going on starting today and going until October 31st. You can get the issue for just $10, plus a personal communication from one of the issue’s guest editors / commentators (ie. Walter Benjamin, Jean Baudrillard, Jacques Derrida, Søren Kierkegaard; chosen at random) as well as a postcard commemorating the publication of [out of nothing]‘s first print anthology. Check it out.

More information on the presale and issue here and here.

Check out past issues of [out of nothing] here.

Also exciting, is the launch of [outward from nothingness], our new blog where there will be various conversations, interviews, and supplementary materials. Just up, an interview with Jacques Derrida.

***

Now Available:

Issue #0
theoretical perspectives on the substance preceding [nothing]

144 perfect-bound pages of new work from:
Danielle Adair / Maureen Alsop / Amina Cain & Jennifer Karmin /
Laton Carter / John Cleary / Debra Di Blasi / Mark Ge /
Nicholas Grider / Bhanu Kapil / Maxi Kim / Ian M McCarty /
Nick Montfort / Gerard Olson / ShoneOne / Vanessa Place / Chris Sylvester /
Tom Trudgeon / Laura A. Vena / Christine Wertheim / Jared Woodland

Guest editing and commentary provided by:
Walter Benjamin / Jean Baudrillard / Jacques Derrida / Søren Kierkegaard

Introduction by Jon Wagner

Book design by Joe Potts

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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October 15th, 2012 / 11:00 am

FYI, Scott Esposito is leading a group reading of William H. Gass’s The Tunnel over at Conversational Reading. It’s three weeks in, goes until  3 November. Schedule’s here.

Everything is Beautiful and We Bother Because We Need To: On Lit Journals

This is in response to Mike Kitchell’s recent piece “Everything is fucked and why do we bother,” (damn, that title looks bleak in isolation) questioning the need for so many lit journals; for historical precedent note last year’s ToBS round in which Melissa Broder deemed being editor-in-chief of a lit journal more akin to being “editor-in-chief of a blogspot,” which, maybe I would amend that to Tumblr, but still a worthy invective for our day and time, in which lit journals elicit such teeth-gnashing blog post titles as Mr. Kitchell’s, to say nothing of such statements at large…. READ MORE >

Random / 2 Comments
October 15th, 2012 / 9:14 am

An Interview with Christine Schutt

Christine Schutt is the author of two short story collections, A Day, A Night, Another Day, Summer and Nightwork. She is also the author of two novels: All Souls, which was a finalist for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize, and Florida, a finalist for the 2004 National Book Award. With Diane Williams, she edits the literary journal NOON. Her new novel, Prosperous Friends, will be published by Grove Press on November 6.

Michelle Y. Burke is the author of Horse Loquela, winner of the 2007 Red Mountain Review Chapbook Series Award. She lives in Cincinnati.

Burke: One of the things I admire most about your writing is how it sounds. Your sentences are so rich and lyrical. To what extent are you thinking about sound when you’re writing?

Schutt: I do think about sound. What I want to do is wed sound to scene. What comes first is a picture. READ MORE >

Random / 10 Comments
October 14th, 2012 / 1:17 pm

The Master is hard to talk about, let’s talk nearby instead.

Reviews

On Poems On

On Poems On
by Sandra Liu
Ugly Duckling Presse, 2012
28 pages / $8  Buy from UDP

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even though there’s nothing particularly insular or fragmentary about Sandra Liu’s work, it’s still difficult to grasp exactly what’s going on in the book because of the restless nature of the poems’ wanderings through landscape, experience, character and image.  Nominally this is free verse written in standard syntax, but individual lines or sentences in Liu’s poems aren’t trustworthy indicators of what might come next.  This is always a good thing, because the unpredictability adds to the poems’ allure and as I read through the chapbook I found myself drawn closer and closer to whatever sharp turn the poem might next, unless there’s no sharp turn or the poem cuts off abruptly.  The poems in On Poems On are a ceaseless lateral movement along or between landscapes either literal, linguistic, or informative that leave you with a sense of having visited a location or moment without being allowed to linger long enough for details of daily life to become mundane.

This isn’t to say that the poems are particularly wild, save for the punctuations throughout the book of often deadly violence; the work is measured and light, and could pass as graceful observational poetry if there weren’t more at work, like the aforementioned violence.  A good example of this is “Static,” in which dryly delivered information about the geography of and south of Indonesia is woven together with scenes of rioting crowds gunned down by state forces:

          From New Guinea, a stretched
archipelago, grenades, AK-47s,
household bombs and machetes alternate with an underwater
topography, flats of nadir in several areas of the city and extended airscaping
ridges
leading to Halmahera,
itself comprising four peninsulas, each,

a 12-year-old boy, drawn out by congeries of islets,
traversed by SUV.

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October 12th, 2012 / 12:00 pm